Letters from St. Petersburg
2021 / 17 minutes / Russian with English subtitles
Letters from St. Petersburg is an extension of Lotte Nielsen's previous artistic work documenting groups of young LGBTQ + people across different cultures, most recently in Turkey, the US and now Russia. Her films center on the exploration of group identity and the repercussions of national political conditions in every facet of these individuals’ lives.
In poetic, color-saturated imagery, Lotte Nielsen draws an empathetic portrait of a group of young people from the LGBTQ + organization Coming Out. The film takes place over a couple of days, where they are gathered in the collective Triglinki in central St. Petersburg. Founded in their personal universes from which they share music, lyrics and stories, we experience a group of young people who stand by their identity, expression and way of life in a country where the government seeks to forcibly oppress all who do not adhere to the conservative, patriarchal values that it promotes.
Since the adoption of the Law against Homopropaganda in 2013, Russia has experienced a sharp decline in basic rights and living conditions for LGBTQ + people. Police violence, hate crimes and harassment have been and still are a part of everyday life for many LGBTQ + people in the country.
“we enter into the film with primary characters that are rocks and minerals. The ‘desert rose’, a stone of Egypt, opens the film — one formed in the desert which, for unknown reasons, develops into the shape of the flower of its name. A gentle voice of a chemistry student introduces us to two rocks forged differently and yet made of the same chemical composition. We are opened to the acknowledgment that external pressures are fundamental to the formation of vessels: to stones, as to us.”
— Excerpt from We Are, As the Desert Rose. By Kelly Krugman
Trailer for Letters from St. Petersburg
Exhibitions
Gruppenausstellung | April 2022 | Künstlerhaus Bethanien
Gruppenausstellung | April 2022 | Künstlerhaus Bethanien
Gruppenausstellung | April 2022 | Künstlerhaus Bethanien